Finnish Pipunculidae (Diptera) studies Part I: Taxonomic notes on Cephalops Fallén, 1810, Pipunculus Latreille, 1802 and Tomosvaryella Aczél, 1939
Author
Kehlmaier, Christian
text
Zootaxa
2008
1672
1
42
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.180216
f7c4a979-1dc7-400b-b5b0-eec6919fa931
1175-5326
180216
Pipunculus campestris
Latreille, 1802
(
Figs 9–15, 19
,
67, 70–71
,
78, 83
,
87, 89 & 91
)
Pipunculus ater
Meigen, 1824
: 23
. Syn.:
Verrall (1901: 102)
.
Pipunculus campestris
Latreille, 1802
: 463
.
Pipunculus dentipes
Meigen, 1838
: 146
. Syn.:
Verrall (1901: 102)
.
Pipunculus dispar
Zetterstedt, 1838
: 579
. Syn.:
Zetterstedt (1844: 953)
.
Pipunculus spinipes
Meigen, 1830
: 359
. syn. nov.
Pipunculus thomsoni
Becker, 1897
: 67
. syn. nov.
Pipunculus campestris
ssp.
himalayensis
Brunetti, 1912
: 487
.
Material:
France
, Paris region: 1Ψ (
lectotype
P. campestris
), Latreille (
MNHN
);
Poland
, Silesia, Legnica, no. 7985: 1Ψ (
lectotype
P. thomsoni
),
15.V.
, Becker (
MNHU
);
Sweden
, Lapland, Lycksele: 1ɗ (
lectotype
P. d i s - par
), Zetterstedt (
ZML
); no.
122240
: 1ɗ (
lectotype
P. s p i n i p e s
) 1ɗ 1Ψ (
paralectotypes
P. spinipes
), (
MNHN
); no.
122940
: 1ɗ (
lectotype
P. a t e r
), (
MNHN
); no.
122340
: 1ɗ (
lectotype
P. d e n t i p e s
) 1Ψ (
paralectotype
P. dentipes
), (
MNHN
);
Finland
, N, Sibbo, Nevas, 6687:412: 5ɗ,
28.VII.–4.VIII.1986
, Albrecht;
Germany
, Bremen, Rekum Weser: 1ɗ 1Ψ,
10.V.2001
, Kehlmaier (
PCCK
);
Germany
, Bremen, Stadtwald: 2ɗ 2Ψ,
21.VIII.2001
, Kehlmaier (
PCCK
).
FIGURES 1–8.
Surstyli in strictly dorsal and outer surstylus in lateral view of male
Pipunculus violovitshi
(1 & 5),
Pipunculus elegans
(2 & 6),
Pipunculus oldenbergi
(3 & 7) and
Pipunculus zugmayeriae
(4 & 8). Scale bars = 0.1mm.
Male
: Body length:
3.8–4.5mm
. Wing length:
4.1–4.8mm
. Flagellum dark brown. Frons brown pollinose. Occiput grey pollinose in lower, brown pollinose in upper half. Eyes meeting for about length of frons or slightly less (15–16 facets). Postpronotal lobe dark brown. Prescutum and scutum brown pollinose. Anepimeron predominantly or entirely brown pollinose, katepisternum in upper half and anepisternum narrowly along posterior margin with brown pollinosity, otherwise pleura weakly grey pollinose. Scutellum with apical fringe of about 12 evenly spaced hairs. Subscutellum greyish-brown pollinose (
Fig. 87
), the brown pollinosity can be reduced to upper lateral corners. LTC about 1.0–1.5 times LFC. Trochanter dark brown. Femur with apex narrowly yellow.
Hind
femur weakly concave in ventrobasal half (not distinctly hollowed). Tibia yellowish in basal quarter to third. Tarsi brownish with distitarsi darkest. Pulvilli of front legs slightly shorter than distitarsi. Tergites 1–2 (or 1–3) entirely brown pollinosity, tergites (3–)4 brown pollinose except narrowly along posterior margin shining, tergite 5 brown pollinose in anterior half to three quarters, otherwise shining. Membranous area key-hole shaped, a small but distinct keel can be present. Shape of surstyli variable (
Figs 9– 15
), can be identical to
P. tenuirostris
. Only two ejaculatory ducts distinctly sclerotized.
Female
: Body length:
3.7–4.7mm
. Wing length:
4.8–5.4mm
. Flagellum dark brown to yellowish-brown. Frons grey pollinose, shining centrally in upper half to very narrowly before ocellar triangle. Postpronotal lobe dark brown to yellowish. Prescutum and scutum grey pollinose in anterior two fifth, along lateral margins and in posterior one fifth, otherwise brown pollinose. Pleura and subscutellum grey pollinose. LTC about 1.0– 1.2 times LFC. Trochanter yellowish. Femur with base and apex narrowly yellow. Tibia yellow, darkened ventromedially. Tarsi brownish with distitarsi darkened. Pulvilli of front legs 1.5 times length of distitarsi. All tergites laterally grey pollinose. Tergite 1 anterodorsally brown, otherwise grey pollinose. Tergite 2 with anterodorsal quarter grey pollinose (some weak brown pollinosity may be present). Tergite 3–6 shining dorsally. Ovipositor in lateral view with a rather short, weakly curved piercer (can occ. be shorter than figured here), ventrally without a distinct angled step (
Fig. 68
)—the ovipositor’s base of the
lectotype
of
P. thomsoni
is slightly squashed and hence somewhat deformed (
Fig. 67
). Rarely, the ovipositor may be as illustrated in
Figs 70–71
.
Annotations
: In 1802, Latreille established the genus
Pipunculus
, giving his own taxon
P. campestris
as an example and hence making it the
type
species. Three years later,
Latreille (1805)
then provides a slightly more detailed description of
P. campestris
, stating that he found the specimens in the surroundings of Paris. Latreille’s collection has been situated at MNHN in Paris for a long time but it seems as if no subsequent pipunculid worker was able to study his
types
, as these specimens were considered lost until recently (De Meyer 1996;
Skevington &
Marshall
1998
). When Jeff Skevington visited the museum in 1998, the late Loїc Matile, then curator of the
Diptera
section, “
…knew exactly where they were
” (Skevington in litt.). Matile’s opinion is followed here. The
type
series remaining consists of a female
Jassidophaga villosa
, a female
Eudorylas obliquus
and a female hereby designated as
lectotype
of
Pipunculus campestris
with its head and right wing missing. The
lectotype
has a small rectangular white label with a hand written “L.” (or “7”). The concept of
P. c a m p e s t r i s
presented here is in accordance with the species’ limit outlined in
Skevington &
Marshall
(1998)
. It has to be admitted that the separation of female
P. campestris
and
P. omissinervis
is not feasible at present, as no clear morphological features have been found so far. However,
P. omissinervis
is a taxon with a predominantly boreo-alpine distribution in Europe (see below) and therefore unlikely to be present in the Paris region.
The original
type
series of
Pipunculus ater
was made up of several male specimens (exact number unknown). Today, only a single male labelled “
122940
” remains at MNHN which is designated
lectotype
. The specimen was studied (the shape of the surstyli are presented in
Fig. 9
) and its synonymy with
P. campestris
, first proposed by
Verrall (1901)
, is shared.
Pipunculus dentipes
was described from both sexes. At MNHN in Paris, one male and one female are present in Meigen’s collection, both labelled “
122340
”. The genitalia of the male specimen, designated
lectotype
herewith, could be studied (
Fig. 10
). The synonymy with
P. campestris
, as proposed by
Verrall (1901)
, can be confirmed.
Of
Pipunculus dispar
, originally described from a couple taken in copula and placed on one pin, only the male remains at MNHN, the female being gone except for the left fore leg which has long pulvilli.
Collin (1956)
designated the male specimen as
lectotype
. Its genitalia were studied and the surstyli figured (
Fig. 11
). The synonymy with
P. c a m p e s t r i s
, proposed by
Zetterstedt (1844: 953)
[as
P. a t e r
], can be affirmed.
FIGURES 9–14.
Surstyli in strictly dorsal view of male
Pipunculus campestris
. Scale bars = 0.1mm.
Also at MNHN,
2 males
and
1 female
were found in the Meigen collection under
Pipunculus spinipes
, which was originally described from both sexes. The male labelled as “
Type
” by Becker in 1900 is hereby designated as
lectotype
and was found to be conspecific with
P. campestris
. Its surstyli are figured (
Fig. 12
). The second male has its abdomen smothered in glue on a square piece of cardboard. It could not be dissected but from the shape of the membranous area and the pollinosity of the prescutum, scutum, pleurae and postscutellum it is also regarded to belong to
P. campestris
, just as the single female
paralectotype
is. Although
Meigen (1830)
mentions a shining abdomen in the original description, as pointed out by
Collin (1956)
in the past, the specimens encountered at MNHN are regarded as the only remaining
types
and Collin’s (1956) objections to such a procedure are rejected.
FIGURES 15–21.
Surstyli in strictly dorsal and outer surstylus in lateral view of male
Pipunculus campestris
(15 & 19) and
Pipunculus fonsecai
(16–18 & 20–21). Scale bars = 0.1mm.
Becker (1897)
delimits males and females of
Pipunculus thomsoni
as a sibling species from what he regarded as
Cephalops pratorum
Fallén, 1816
based on an unknown number of specimens from Scandinavia, Silesia and
Bohemia
. Note, that
Becker (1897)
is figuring the lateral shape of the ovipositor of
P. a t e r
(his
Fig. 20
),
P. campestris
(his
Fig. 11
) and
P. thomsoni
(his
Fig. 18
). Whereas his perception of the female terminalia of
P. a t e r
and
P. campestris
erroneously consists of a long and rather straight piercer,
P. thomsoni
exhibits the typical
campestris
-like ovipositor. At MNHU in Berlin, seven males and five females from Becker’s collection are placed under
P. thomsoni
. One of the males has a red
type
label and a white label with
Thomsoni
in Becker’s handwriting attached to the needle. This specimen was collected in “Dalmatien, 16/5, 22429”, which nowadays is part of
Croatia
, and hence cannot be part of the
type
series (Scandinavia, Silesia,
Bohemia
). Of the other specimens, two females and four males could be attributed to the regions indicated for the
type
series with certainty: 1ɗ, “Karislojo, 43953”:
Finland
, Regio Aboensis; 1ɗ, “Oderwald, 8/6, 1151”:
Poland
, Silesia, Wojszyn; 1ɗ, “Oderwald, 8/7, 1154”:
Poland
, Silesia, Wojszyn; 1ɗ, “Buschhäuser, 3/7, 28830”:
Czech Republic
,
Bohemia
, Lesní Domky; 1Ψ, “Liegnitz, 15/5, 7986”:
Poland
, Silesia, Legnica; 1Ψ, “Brechelshof, 17/5, 39582”:
Poland
, Silesia, Żarek, Brachów. Whereas all four males were identified as
P. tenuirostris
, the female specimens belong to
P. campestris
. The female collected in Becker’s hometown Liegnitz/Legnica corresponds with his drawing of
P. t h o m s o n i
and also has a label stating “
Thomsoni
” in Becker’s hand attached to it. This specimen is therefore designated as
lectotype
and the name considered a junior synonym of
P. campestris
(syn. nov.). The possibility that the specimen is actually a female
P. omissinervis
is disregarded as the latter has a predominantly boreo-alpine distribution in Europe (see below).
Brunetti (1912)
characterises his subspecies
himalayensis
from two males originally deposited at the Indian Museum (nowadays Zoological Survey of
India
in Calcutta), which have to be considered lost today (
Kapoor
et al
. 1987
; De Meyer 1996). Judging from the description, it is most likely that
himalayensis
should represent a distinct taxon, the occiput being dark grey and the abdominal tergites being greyish towards the sides.
Female specimens of
P. campestris
can presently not be differentiated from female
P. omissinervis
. In the identification key presented here, it was decided to regard all specimens with a
campestris
-like ovipositor as
P. campestris
agg. unless obvious morphological features for separating the two are revealed. However,
P. omissinervis
exhibits a predominantly boreo-alpine distributional pattern in Europe (also see below), compared to the widely distributed
P. campestris
. In the eastern Palaearctic region, female
P. campestris
is cited from
Japan
in Morakote & Hirashima (1990), whereas
Kuznetzov (1990)
records a single female for
Mongolia
. As long as no male specimens are collected in these countries to corroborate the citings, it is therefore proposed to regard them as
P. campestris
agg. instead.